This document provides instructions and materials for students to analyze poems by Filipino authors written in English. It includes the text of the poem "You Asked Me How Much I Love You" by Benito Reyes and discusses elements of poetry like stanzas, form, rhyme scheme, imagery, figurative language, purpose, tone, speaker, and sound devices. Students are assigned to analyze poems using both objective and subjective approaches in a written assignment.
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Elements of Poetry
This document provides instructions and materials for students to analyze poems by Filipino authors written in English. It includes the text of the poem "You Asked Me How Much I Love You" by Benito Reyes and discusses elements of poetry like stanzas, form, rhyme scheme, imagery, figurative language, purpose, tone, speaker, and sound devices. Students are assigned to analyze poems using both objective and subjective approaches in a written assignment.
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SURVEY ON PHILIPPINE
LITERATURE IN ENGLISH
POEM ANALYSIS ACTIVITY: SPEECH CHOIR OF You Asked Me How Much I Love You By: Benito Reyes You Asked Me How Much By: Benito Reyes
You ask me how much I love you,
Ah, lovely inquisitive lips You would want to fathom the ocean And scale the infinite blue above us.
Shall I count the sands on the seashore,
Or pick the numberless stars of heaven Like some sweet woodland blossoms? You Asked Me How Much By: Benito Reyes
Ask then the bold eagle of the air
If you could soar the ends of the distance , Or the worm of the ground if it could crawl Down to the very core of the earth.
And you ask me how much I love you
Ah, lovely inquisitive lips, You would want to fathom the ocean And scale the infinite blue above us. You Asked Me How Much By: Benito Reyes
Read !read the answer in my eyes
And in the quiverless muteness of my lips... For there are things that are voiceless And would be told only in silence! A. STANZAS • series of lines grouped together and separated by an empty line from other stanzas • are the equivalent of a paragraph in an essay • one way to identify a stanza is to count the number of lines POEM ANALYSIS POEM ANALYSIS • Hard copy of the assigned poems. – the poem – background of the poet • Power point presentation – the poem – background of the poet – line per line analysis of the poem – objective and subjective analysis – Subjective: • Choose the most appropriate theory for the poem. • Objective approach: – Who is the persona/subject? Who is being talked to in the poem? – Where is the setting? – Is there a specific rhyme scheme? how many lines are there? – What figures of speech are used? – What tone and mood are created at various parts of the work? – Convey the significant human experience. How can you relate to the poem? What are your insights? What is the message of the poet? GROUP 1 POEMS 1. Cecilio Apostol – To the Yankee 2. Amador Daguio – Man of Earth 3. Jose Garcia Villa – Poem 10 4. Angela M. Gloria – I Have Begrudged the Years 5. Emmanuel Torres – Song for a Dry Season 6. Benilda Santos – Eve, to Adam GROUP 2 POEMS 6. Cirilo F. Bautista – Song of the Teargassed Man 7. Ophelia Dimalanta – A Kind of Burning 8. Merlie Alunan – We Kept A Jarful of Tears 9. Ricardo M. de Ungria – Body English Rene 10. Estrella Amper – Letter to Pedro, US Citizen, Also Called Pete 11. Danton Remoto – The Way We Live A. STANZAS • series of lines grouped together and separated by an empty line from other stanzas • are the equivalent of a paragraph in an essay • one way to identify a stanza is to count the number of lines GROUP 3 POEMS 11. Simeon Dumdum, Jr. – Night; Letter to a Friend 12. Gemino Abad – The Future is First Shaped by Words 13. Alfredo Navarra Salanga – Thin Poems Occasioned by Big and Small 14. Edgardo Maranan – Events; The Farmer’s Son; Trails 15. Alfred Yuson – Lovelight 16.Rogelio L. Ordoňez – La Tierra Pobreza; Am No Write GROUP 4 POEMS 16. Rolando S. Tinio – Valediction sa Hillcrest 17. Mariano Kilates – Love is a Ghost Lurking in the Daylight Corner; Finder of the Image 18. Francis Macasantos – Promenade 19. Jose F. Lacaba – Force of Circumstance 20. Virgilio S. Almario – The Life of Ka Bestre, Rig Driver 21. Luis Dato – The Spouse ELEMENTS OF POETRY A. STANZAS • couplet (2 lines) • tercet (3 lines) • quatrain (4 lines) • cinquain (5 lines) • sestet (6 lines) (also called a sexain) • septet (7 lines) • octave (8 lines) B. FORM • A. Narrative • B. Lyric • C. Dramatic C. RHYME SCHEME • pattern according to which end rhymes (rhymes located at the end of lines) are repeated in works poetry • are described using letters of the alphabet beginning with A C. RHYME
• could be end rhyme or internal
rhyme • "Whiles all the night through fog- smoke white" • Eye-Rhyme: words only look as if they’d rhyme (cough-bough) C. RHYME
• could be end rhyme or internal
rhyme • "Whiles all the night through fog- smoke white" D. Connotation and Denotation • Connotation: – implied meaning & attitude, suggestions & associations, emotional connections • Denotation: – dictionary definition E. Diction Types of diction: • formal: no slang or clichés; no contractions; proper punctuation, style, grammar; keeps a “formal distance” from the reader • informal: slang,expressions/clichés; used amongst friends • colloquial: informal; used in personal, everyday speech (clichés); F. Imagery • sense detail; • image = sensory experience made of words • used to represent abstract ideas • used to make comparison or invoke another level of reality • used to invoke the material world through sense detail or description G. Figurative Language • Simile • Metaphor • Personification • Hyperbole • Irony – Verbal – Situational – Dramatic H. Purpose • employed to link unrelated objects or ideas • employed to relate an unknown via something known • employed to allow readers to look afresh, to see anew something familiar • employed to spark reader’s imagination • employed to prompt the reader to consider new thoughts I. Tone
• attitude of speaker towards
subject and/or audience • joyous, playful, light, hopeful, expectant, admiring, celebratory J. Speaker • narrator, persona • NOT necessarily the author • NOT his/her gender, race, age • not automatically his thoughts, views, opinions, beliefs, attitudes K. Sound Devices • alliteration (repetition of initial sound (consonant, vowel) or consonant sound; reinforces meaning) – “bring me my bow of burning gold” & “awful auguries” • assonance (repetition of vowel sounds, reinforces emotion) – don’t rhyme – tide-mine • consonance (repetition of consonant sounds, with different vowel sounds) – fail-feel • onomatopoeia (words that echo sound they denote) – swish, hiss, buzz K. Sound Devices • alliteration (repetition of initial sound (consonant, vowel) or consonant sound; reinforces meaning) – “bring me my bow of burning gold” & “awful auguries” • assonance (repetition of vowel sounds, reinforces emotion) – don’t rhyme – tide-mine • consonance (repetition of consonant sounds, with different vowel sounds) – fail-feel • onomatopoeia (words that echo sound they denote) – swish, hiss, buzz ASSIGNMENT: • Analyze the poems using the objective (structuralist) and subjective (choose your own lit theory) angles. • Must be written in a one whole sheet yellow paper. • One poem per paper. • NO PLAGIARISM!